Hamstring Strains
One of the most common injuries in cricket — explosive running between wickets, the delivery stride, and diving in the field all place high eccentric demand on the hamstring. Grade and location determine management.
Hamstring Strains in Cricket
Hamstring strains occur when the hamstring muscle-tendon unit is loaded beyond its capacity — most commonly during high-speed running, explosive acceleration, or the eccentric demands of the fast bowling delivery stride. In cricket, hamstring strains affect batters, bowlers, and fielders.
The biceps femoris (outer hamstring) is the most commonly strained muscle, typically in the muscle belly or at the myotendinous junction. Proximal hamstring strains — near the ischial tuberosity attachment — are less common but more complex to manage and often misdiagnosed.
Accurate grading of the strain on MRI — not just clinical assessment — significantly improves return-to-sport prediction and helps avoid the most common management mistake: returning too early and sustaining a recurrence.
Small number of fibres torn. Minimal strength loss. Typically returns to play in 1–2 weeks with appropriate management. Often underestimated and undertreated.
Partial tear of the muscle belly. Significant pain and strength loss. Return to play typically 3–6 weeks. Requires structured rehabilitation and objective clearance criteria.
Complete muscle or tendon tear. Rare. May require surgical consultation. Extended recovery of 3–6 months. Proximal avulsions require specialist orthopaedic review.
Symptoms
Why Hamstring Strains Recur — and How We Prevent It
Hamstring reinjury rates in cricket are high — primarily because players return too early, without adequate strength testing, and without addressing the underlying risk factors.
Our Management Approach
Acute Assessment & Imaging
Clinical assessment to grade the strain and identify the structure involved. MRI is recommended for moderate to severe strains — it significantly improves return-to-sport timeline prediction and rules out proximal tendon involvement, which requires a different management approach.
Early Phase — Tissue Protection & Load Introduction
Initial management focuses on protecting the healing tissue while introducing early, pain-free loading. Walking, isometric hamstring exercises, and gentle range of motion work begin within the first few days — complete rest is not recommended and delays recovery.
Strength Rebuilding
Progressive hamstring strengthening — advancing from isometric through isotonic to eccentric loading as the tissue heals. The Nordic hamstring exercise is introduced progressively and forms the cornerstone of the strength program. We track objective strength measures throughout.
Running Progression
A structured running program progressing from walking through jogging to sprinting — with specific velocity thresholds that must be achieved before progressing. High-speed running is the most important and most commonly neglected component of hamstring rehabilitation.
Return to Cricket — Staged
Return to batting, then fielding, then bowling — in that order, based on hamstring loading demands. Objective strength criteria must be met before return to each stage. We provide written clearance criteria and communicate with coaches throughout.
FAQ — Hamstring Strains
It depends on the grade of the strain. Grade 1 strains typically allow return to batting in 1–2 weeks and bowling in 2–3 weeks with appropriate management. Grade 2 strains typically require 4–6 weeks before return to full cricket activity. We'll give you a specific timeline based on your assessment and imaging findings.
For Grade 1 strains, clinical assessment is often sufficient. For moderate to severe strains, MRI significantly improves management — particularly for identifying proximal tendon involvement, which changes the rehabilitation approach considerably. We'll advise on whether imaging is warranted at your assessment.
Yes — recurrent hamstring strains require more careful management. Previous injury is one of the strongest risk factors for reinjury, and it usually means there are underlying strength deficits or movement patterns that weren't adequately addressed the first time. We'll assess these specifically.
No referral needed. Book a free call or an initial appointment directly online.
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No referral needed · Five Dock, Inner West Sydney · Health fund rebates available
Related Conditions
Pars stress fractures in fast bowlers — requires specialist management.
Internal oblique tears at the rib attachment in fast bowlers.
Compression at the delivery stride in fast bowlers.
Repetitive bowling and throwing loads on the rotator cuff.
SportsFit Cricket Physio — Five Dock
164 Great North Road, Five Dock NSW 2046 · (02) 8054 3775